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How Cities Can Build Better Urban Transit Systems

By
Jenny Friedland

June 7, 2019, 10:38 PM UTC

In this Feb. 21, 2019, photo, Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) train passes during a trial run in Jakarta, Indonesia. Commuting in the gridlocked Indonesian capital will for some involve less frustration, sweat and fumes when its first subway line opens later this month. The 10-mile system running south from Jakarta's downtown is the first phase of a development that if fully realized will plant a cross-shaped network of stations in the teeming city of 30 million people.AP Photo

In this Feb. 21, 2019, photo, Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) train passes during a trial run in Jakarta, Indonesia. Commuting in the gridlocked Indonesian capital will for some involve less frustration, sweat and fumes when its first subway line opens later this month. The 10-mile system running south from Jakarta's downtown is the first phase of a development that if fully realized will plant a cross-shaped network of stations in the teeming city of 30 million people.AP Photo

How Cities Can Build Better Urban Transit Systems

By
Jenny Friedland

June 7, 2019, 10:38 PM UTC

Bikesharing has come to Chicago. Shared electric scooters are coming next, on June 15. And the CTA provides millions of rides to Chicagoans each year. Urban transportation options abound, and on this segment, we talk about many of them with Sam Kling, global cities fellow and ACLS/Mellon public fellow at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, and Sam Schwartz, president and CEO of Sam Schwartz Transportation Consultants, a firm that specializes in transportation planning and engineering. They discuss which cities are getting transportation right and how others can improve, looking at issues like congestion taxes and the role that electric and driverless cars will play in the city landscape moving forward.

Worldview has partnered with the Chicago Council on Global Affairs to bring you voices from the Pritzker Forum on Global Cities, which runs June 5-7, 2019.